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Dogs in Ancient Warfare

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

Extract

This passage has suggested that it might be interesting to collect, as far as possible, the passages dealing with the use of dogs in ancient warfare and make a comparison with modern practice. The references which I have discovered, and which seem mainly to refer to Greek warfare, are numerous, but no doubt there are others which I have failed to trace.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1941

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References

page 114 note 1 For similar use of dogs by the Cimmerians themselves see Bury, , History of Greece, p. 112Google Scholar, and the frieze on a sarcophagus of Clazomenae there reproduced.

page 116 note 1 In Livy, v. 47, we read that, when the Gauls came so near to capturing the Capitol, the dogs, unlike the geese, failed to notice their approach.

page 117 note 1 The nearest ancient approach to which was the sacred dogs of Adranus in Sicily, which saw drunken revellers safely home at night! (Aelian, , De Nat. Anim. xi. 20.Google Scholar)